C ClothingOptional.org
Beach

Marin County, California

RCA Beach

RCA Beach is an informal clothing-optional spot in the Bolinas Lagoon / Stinson Beach area of Marin County, within or adjacent to Golden Gate National Recreation Area.

Beginner
Family-friendly Field verified
  • Day use
RCA Beach

About this place

RCA Beach is an informal clothing-optional spot in the Bolinas Lagoon / Stinson Beach area of Marin County, within or adjacent to Golden Gate National Recreation Area. The name references the former RCA radio transmitter towers that once stood in this part of Marin, and it's been used as a local navigation reference for naturist spots in the area.

The beach sits in a stretch of open Pacific coast between Stinson Beach and Bolinas — a section of shoreline with limited public parking and road access, which keeps it relatively uncrowded. The C/O tradition is informal and has been maintained by Marin County outdoor regulars for decades. The water is cold, the scenery is characteristically Northern California coast — dune grass, fog, distant views south toward the Farallon Islands — and the crowd is the low-key outdoor type.

Access requires local knowledge — there's no marked trailhead or parking. Most visitors come from the Stinson Beach area or via coastal hiking trails in the GGNRA. The Bolinas area is famously reluctant to publicize its location; the road sign for the Bolinas turnoff from Highway 1 is regularly removed by locals. That spirit of deliberate obscurity carries over to the beach.

Visitor notes

Contributed by ClothingOptional.org Editorial Team

Who visits

Local Marin naturists and GGNRA hikers who know the area well. Not a destination for first-time visitors; access requires local knowledge or determined research.

How to find it

From Highway 1 in Stinson Beach, access is via coastal trail or via local roads toward Bolinas. Current access information circulates through Marin County naturist community channels.

Things to watch out for

Access is informal — no posted parking or trailhead. Pacific water is cold year-round. GGNRA rules technically prohibit nudity; enforcement varies.

Last updated

Etiquette & ground rules

Low-key and informal — keep it that way. The local Bolinas community values its privacy.

Know this spot?

Report an update

Beach closed? Parking price changed? Section moved? Send a short note and we'll check it.

Also in California

More places nearby

Baker Beach (North End)
Beach

California, USA

Baker Beach (North End)

Baker Beach is a half-mile of Pacific shoreline tucked under the Presidio cliffs in northwest San Francisco, with one of the most famous postcard views in the United States: the Golden Gate Bridge framed against the Marin headlands. The northern end of the beach — closest to the bridge itself — is the long-established clothing-optional section, and has been for decades. The southern end is the textile family-beach part; nudity convention shifts as you walk north toward the rocky cove below Battery Chamberlin. Public nudity is technically prohibited under San Francisco municipal code, but Baker Beach is administered by the National Park Service (Presidio/Golden Gate National Recreation Area) rather than by the city, and the NPS doesn't enforce the prohibition. The result is a tolerated, decades-old C/O zone with no signs but a clear local convention. Visitors who stay in the northern third — past the rocky outcrop, in the direction of the Sand Ladder Trail — are operating within the established norm. The crowd is genuinely diverse Bay Area: San Francisco locals on a weekend, tech-industry expats, the long-standing queer community that has used the northern end as a meeting spot for decades, and curious tourists who heard about it. Cold Pacific water (typically 12-15°C even in summer) and the afternoon fog mean Baker Beach is a sunbathing-and-walking beach more than a swimming beach. Practical notes: free parking at several lots along Bowley Street and at the Battery Chamberlin lot at the north end; the Sand Ladder Trail from Lincoln Boulevard is the steep alternate entry. Parking fills early on warm weekends. Bus access via the 29-Sunset route to Lincoln/25th Avenue.

Iconic Urban LGBTQ-friendly
Beeks Bight
Beach

California, USA

Beeks Bight

Beeks Bight is an informal clothing-optional area along the Sacramento River near Folsom, California — a stretch of river bank in the American River Parkway system of the Sacramento Valley. The spot takes its name from an old Sacramento River landmark and has been used by Sacramento area naturists as a river skinny-dipping spot for generations. The Sacramento River here is wide, warm in summer, and flanked by riparian forest of cottonwood, willow, and Valley oak — the characteristic landscape of California's Central Valley rivers. Unlike the cold Pacific coast, the Sacramento Valley runs hot in summer (100°F+ regularly), and the river water warms to genuinely pleasant swimming temperatures of 72–78°F from late June through September. Sacramento is in the center of California's inland valley network, and river access near the city fills a recreational niche that the ocean or mountain lakes can't serve for people who want a same-day outing. The American River Parkway trails and the Folsom Lake recreation area are the backbone of Sacramento's outdoor recreation system.

Day use Freshwater River
Black Sands Beach
Beach

California, USA

Black Sands Beach

Black Sands Beach is a dark-sand beach in the Marin Headlands portion of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, named for the distinctive dark volcanic and serpentine rock that erodes into the sand. The beach is reached via a short but steep trail from the Conzelman Road / Battery Spencer area and is a different location from Rodeo Beach (about 2 miles to the west) — both are in the Marin Headlands, but serve different communities of regulars. Black Sands has an informal C/O tradition with deep roots in the San Francisco gay community — the Marin Headlands above are on the Golden Gate Bridge north approach, and the beach below has long been a clothing-optional destination for Bay Area LGBTQ+ outdoor visitors. The setting is dramatic: sheer cliffs, cold Pacific surf, the Golden Gate visible to the south, container ships passing at close range through the strait. The GGNRA technically prohibits nudity, but enforcement at Black Sands has been consistently minimal due to the beach's self-selecting access and its established community character. The crowd tends to be male-dominated and LGBTQ+-friendly — a San Francisco institution that has persisted across decades of changing policy environments.

Day use LGBTQ-friendly Hike In

The Dispatch

Get the First-Timer's Checklist.

Plus regular updates on new clothing-optional destinations we've verified. No spam, no nudges, unsubscribe in one click.